 Here's  another excerpt from my book THE ME GENERATION...BY ME (GROWING UP IN THE '60).  I'm going to keep doing these until I sell enough books to get in the Amazon top 10... or at least 10,000.   Here's where you go to get your ebook copy.  And here's where you go to get the handsome paperback.  Read the reviews.  Many are from people I don't even know.
Here's  another excerpt from my book THE ME GENERATION...BY ME (GROWING UP IN THE '60).  I'm going to keep doing these until I sell enough books to get in the Amazon top 10... or at least 10,000.   Here's where you go to get your ebook copy.  And here's where you go to get the handsome paperback.  Read the reviews.  Many are from people I don't even know.  
By 1967 I had been as far south as San  Diego, far north as Santa Barbara, far east as Las Vegas, and far west  as the end of the Santa Monica pier.  But that was about to change.  My  dad announced that we were going up to San Francisco.
Oh.  My.  Fucking.  God.
I  had wanted to go to San Francisco more than anyplace else in the world.   I was intrigued by all the buzz about the music scene there,  Haight-Ashbury, the Summer of Love, and okay, I’ll be honest – I just  wanted to see a Giants game at Candlestick Park.
As always, we  drove.  I still had not been inside an airplane.  Our family trips  tended to be on the frugal side.  We stayed at a Travelodge motel on  Lombard St. in the Marina district. We should have slept in the Impala.  It had more room.
  We should have slept in the Impala.  It had more room.
But  I didn’t care.  I was just thrilled to finally be there.   We saw the  sights, traveled the bridges, dined at Kans in Chinatown, hopped cable  cars, slurped crab cocktails at Fisherman’s Wharf, and gawked at the  basketball-sized bazooms on Carol Doda whose image was proudly and  largely displayed at the topless Condor club in North Beach where she  jiggled them three times nightly.
Side note:  Carol had risen to  prominence in 1964 when many delegates from the Republican National  Convention went to see her act.
I also got my first glimpse of  the Haight-Ashbury district.  This was hippie Mecca, the epicenter of  the counter-culture revolution.  Love was free and the drugs were  reasonable.  With Scott MacKenzie’s “San Francisco” as their anthem,  young people from all over the country migrated to the Haight.  Harvard  Professor Dr. Timothy Leary, the noted advocate of psychedelic drug  research (LSD) coined the catchphrase:  “Turn on, tune in, drop out”.   (That same year Leary would marry his third wife.   Hard to tell  whether the bride was really beautiful that day; all the guests were on  acid.)  This was a Utopian society, an oasis where you were free of the  shackles of expectation and civilization.   A haven for spiritual  awakenings, creative inspiration, and yes, even consciousness expanding.
Haight-Ashbury  looked exactly as you’ve seen it in documentaries and movies of the  60s.   Loads of hippies in colorful garb (some with face paint) milling  about, rolling joints, pla ying  guitars and tambourines.  Murals on the sides of buildings, head stores  and ma & pa markets.  And vivid kaleidoscopic color everywhere –  from Tie Dyed clothes to rainbow store signs to a blue building with a  yellow door.   Imagine Jimi Hendrix as the art director of SESAME  STREET.   But it was festive and fun.
ying  guitars and tambourines.  Murals on the sides of buildings, head stores  and ma & pa markets.  And vivid kaleidoscopic color everywhere –  from Tie Dyed clothes to rainbow store signs to a blue building with a  yellow door.   Imagine Jimi Hendrix as the art director of SESAME  STREET.   But it was festive and fun.
And as we drove through  this idyllic world I thought to myself, “Ugggh!  How the hell can anyone  live here?  It’s so dirty and crowded.  What happens if you get sick?    What kind of privacy would you get in one of these cramped apartments?   How clean are the bathrooms?  What’s the TV reception like?”
I had zero desire to turn, tune, drop, or whatever else was necessary to move to Haight-Ashbury and join this freaky scene.
It's one thing to be a hippie.  It's another to give up creature comforts.
Chủ Nhật, 14 tháng 4, 2013
My celebrated "hippie" period
06:00
  
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